Funders play a critical role, along with universities and publishers, in building and supporting the infrastructure to support open research. Major funders, such as the European Commission, agree that persistent identifiers for people and works are necessary components of this infrastructure. ORCID provides researchers the tools to link their ORCID iD to their funding awards and a growing number of funders are integrating ORCID identifiers into grants application and post-award reporting workflows or are planning to do so. Using ORCID functionality helps to streamline reporting processes during grant application, and, after award, to enable outcomes reporting. This webinar is designed to connect funders who are integrating ORCID identifiers or are looking to do so.
ORCID for funders webinar -NIH use of ORCID to track outcomes - Richard Iikeda * march 2017
1. Richard A. Ikeda, Ph.D.
Director, Office of Research Information Systems and
Research, Condition, and Disease Categorization
National Institutes of Health
2. “Science in pursuit of fundamental
knowledge about the nature and
behavior of living systems
and the application of that knowledge
to extend healthy life and reduce the
burdens of illness and disability.”
...
NIH: Steward of Medical and
Behavioral Research for the Nation
3. U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
Administration for
Children and Families
(ACF)
Food and Drug
Administration
(FDA)
Health Resources
and Services
Administration
(HRSA)
Secretary of
Health and
Human Services
Administration on
Aging
(AoA)
Center for Medicare &
Medicaid Services
(CMS)
Indian Health
Services
(IHS)
National Institutes
of Health
(NIH)
Agency for
Healthcare Research
and Quality
(AHRQ)
Centers for
Disease Control
and Prevention
(CDC)
Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services
Administration
(SAMHSA)
Agency for Toxic
Substances and
Disease Registry
(ATSDR)
4. 4
National Institutes of Health
National Institute
on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism
National Institute
of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal
and Skin Diseases
National Cancer
Institute
National Institute
on Aging
National Institute
of Child Health
and Human
Development
National Institute
of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases
National Institute
of Diabetes and
Digestive and
Kidney Diseases
National Institute
of Dental and
Craniofacial
Research
National Institute
on Drug Abuse
National Institute
of Environmental
Health Sciences
National Institute on
Deafness and Other
Communication
Disorders
National Eye
Institute
National Human
Genome Research
Institute
National Heart,
Lung, and Blood
Institute
National Institute
of Mental Health
National Institute
of Neurological
Disorders and
Stroke
National Institute
of General
Medical Sciences
National Institute
of Nursing Research
National Library
of Medicine
National Center
for Complementary
and Integrative Health
Fogarty
International
Center
National Center
for Advancing
Translational
Sciences
National Institute
of Biomedical
Imaging and
Bioengineering
No funding
authority
NIH
Clinical Center
Center
for Information
Technology
Center
for Scientific
Review
National Center on
Minority Health
and Health
Disparities
Office of the Director
4
5. Understanding the Dual Nature of NIH
5
Data: Assoc of University Technology Managers (AUTM) Survey 2004
Alaska
NIH supports institutions & people
(Extramural Research)
>4,000 institutions
>300,000 scientists & research personnel
~Approx. 80% of the NIH budget
NIH is an institution
(Intramural Research)
~Approx. 6,000 scientists
~Approx. 10% of NIH
budget
6. FY 2016 Operating Budget: $32,311,349
6
Research
Project
Grants:
55.0%
Intramural
Research:
11.0%
R&D Contracts:
9.0%
Research
Centers:
8.1%
Career Dev. 1.9%
Other Research:
4.2%
All Other:
3.1%
Research Mgmt &
Support:
5.0%
Research
Training:
2.6%
NIH Budget Office: http://officeofbudget.od.nih.gov/index.htm
8. 8
Open Mike
Measuring
Impact of NIH-
supported
Publications with
a New Metric:
the Relative
Citation Ratio
https://nexus.od.nih.
gov/all/2016/09/08/
nih-rcr/
9. 9
Open Mike
Measuring
Impact of NIH-
supported
Publications with
a New Metric:
the Relative
Citation Ratio
https://nexus.od.nih.
gov/all/2016/09/08/
nih-rcr/
10. 10
Open Mike
Applying the
Relative Citation
Ratio as a
Measure of
Grant
Productivity
https://nexus.od.nih.
gov/all/2016/10/21/
applying-the-
relative-citation-
ratio-as-a-measure-
of-grant-
productivity/
We focus on a cohort of 60,447 P01 and R01-equivalent
grants (R01, R29, and R37) which were first funded
between 1995 and 2009. Through the end of 2014, these
grants yielded at least 654,607 papers. We calculated a
“weighted RCR” value for each grant, essentially the sum
of the RCR values for each paper.